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Wild Rover

Traditional (Irish) · Irish · 1810s

Key G
Tempo 132 BPM
Difficulty Beginner
Capo No capo
Tuning Standard (E A D G B E)
Chords 3

Original key — recommended starting point.

Chord shapes used in this song

Chord progression

Each box below represents one bar of music. Read left to right; the verse repeats, then the chorus lifts the energy.

Verse

GCDGGCDG

Chorus

CGDGCGDG

Strumming pattern

D - D U - U D U (down on beats 1 & 3, up on the "and" of 2 and 4)

How to learn this song

About this arrangement. This is a beginner-to-intermediate acoustic guitar arrangement of "Wild Rover" — attributed here to Traditional (Irish). The original is in the public domain (or otherwise traditional), and we've voiced it in G so it sits comfortably under common open chord shapes. Irish accompaniment usually walks between chord roots. Once you know the basic shapes, try adding bass walks (low-E string) between changes.

Tuning and setup. Start in standard tuning (E A D G B e) and play without a capo. Recommended tempo: about 132 BPM, but slow it down to 60–70% while you're learning the changes. Difficulty: beginner.

Chord shapes you'll need. This arrangement uses the following chords: G, C, D. Spend a few minutes drilling each shape on its own — pluck each string of the chord to confirm every note rings out cleanly before you start changing between them.

Strumming pattern. D - D U - U D U (down on beats 1 & 3, up on the "and" of 2 and 4) If the strum feels mechanical, breathe with the song — most beginners forget to keep the strumming hand moving even during chord changes. Keep your wrist loose and let the pick (or fingers) graze the strings.

Verse progression. Walk through these chords in 4/4 time, four bars per line: G C D G | G C D G. The chorus shifts the same chords into a different order to lift the energy — see the progression diagram on this page for the full chart.

A 10-minute practice plan. (1) Play each chord shape four times, slowly. (2) Switch between adjacent chords (e.g. C → G, G → D) without strumming, just placing fingers, until you can do it in under a second. (3) Strum the verse progression at half tempo. (4) Bring it up to performance tempo. (5) Add the chorus. Repeat the cycle daily for a week and the song will feel automatic.

Common stumbling blocks. The most frequent issue learners hit on this song is muting the high E or B strings during the chord transitions — usually because a finger from the previous chord lingers a beat too long. If you hear a thud or buzz, freeze your hand and look at which finger is at fault, then practice that one transition in isolation 20 times. Beginners also tend to rush the second half of the verse; an audible tap of the foot or a metronome at 132 BPM fixes it almost immediately.

Listen for. When you hear a polished recording, notice how the player almost never strums identically through every bar — they'll drop a downstroke here, add an extra upstroke there, and occasionally let a chord ring without strumming at all. Don't try to do that on day one, but be aware that the printed pattern is a starting point, not a cage.

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